Isaura Tavares

Isaura Tavares
  • PhD
  • Professor (Associate) at University of Porto

About

162
Publications
21,525
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3,787
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Current institution
University of Porto
Current position
  • Professor (Associate)

Publications

Publications (162)
Article
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Introduction Chronic pain negatively impacts on quality of life and is often underreported and undertreated. Therefore, it is essential for medical schools to provide education in pain management for students. This study evaluated the current state of pain education in the Portuguese medical schools, focusing on integrating pain-related topics into...
Article
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Background Fear of pain is known to influence pain perception and worsen pain outcomes. However, its relationship with pain threshold remains unclear. Negative emotional states, namely depression, anxiety, and stress, have been found to increase fear of pain. Previous pain experiences, both undergone and observed, can also influence fear of pain. F...
Article
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Is the placebo effect something to think about in the Mindfulness-based interventions for chronic pain? We are still at the onset of this fascinating road but there is something to be considered, as shown by this systematic review
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Bone cancer pain (BCP) profoundly impacts patient’s quality of life, demanding more effective pain management strategies. The aim of this systematic review was to investigate the role of inflammatory cytokines as potential molecular targets in BCP. A systematic search for animal rodent models of bone cancer pain studies was conducted in PubMed, Sco...
Article
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Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a side effect of cancer treatment, often linked with pain complaints. Patients report mechanical and thermal hypersensitivity that may emerge during chemotherapy treatment and may persist after cancer remission. Whereas the latter situation disturbs the quality of life, life itself may be endange...
Article
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Background and Objectives: There has been an increasing interest in the use of non-pharmacological approaches for the multidimensional treatment of chronic pain. The aim of this systematic review was to assess the effectiveness of mindfulness-based therapies and Guided Imagery (GI) interventions in managing chronic non-cancer pain and related outco...
Article
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Neuropathic pain is caused by a lesion or disease of the somatosensory system and is one of the most incapacitating pain types, representing a significant non-met medical need. Due to the increase in research in the field and since innovative therapeutic strategies are required, namely in intractable neuropathic pain, neurostimulation has been used...
Article
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Hydrocephalus is characterized by enlargement of the cerebral ventricles, accompanied by distortion of the periventricular tissue. Patients with hydrocephalus usually experience urinary impairments. Although the underlying etiology is not fully described, the effects of hydrocephalus in the neuronal network responsible for the control of urination,...
Preprint
Full-text available
Neuropathic pain is caused by a lesion or disease of the somatosensory system and is one of the most incapacitating pain types, representing a significant non met medical need. Due to the increase in research in the field and since innovative therapeutic strategies are required, namely in intractable neuropathic pain, neurostimulation has been used...
Article
Full-text available
Introduction Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a common consequence of cancer treatment and pain is a frequent complaint of the patients. Paclitaxel, a cytostatic drug, generates a well-described peripheral nerve injury and neuroinflammation, which may be experimentally mimicked in animal models. We conducted a systematic review...
Article
Brainstem areas involved in descending pain modulation are crucial for the analgesic actions of opioids. However, the role of opioids in these areas during tolerance, opioid-induced hyperalgesia (OIH), and in chronic pain settings remains underappreciated. We conducted a revision of the recent studies performed in the main brainstem areas devoted t...
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Chronic pain is an important cause of disability with a high burden to society. Quantitative sensory testing (QST) is a noninvasive multimodal method used to discriminate the function of nerve fibers. The aim of this study is to propose a new, reproducible, and less time-consuming thermal QST protocol to help characterize and monitor pain. Addition...
Article
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The use of neuraxial procedures, such as spinal and epidural anaesthesia, has been linked to some possible complications. In addition, spinal cord injuries due to anaesthetic practice (Anaes-SCI) are rare events but remain a significant concern for many patients undergoing surgery. This systematic review aimed to identify high-risk patients summari...
Article
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Background The continuous changes in the medical education to prepare medical doctors for the future requires updates in medical curriculum. However, the perspectives of the medical students are not frequently considered during the revision of the medical curriculum. In parallel with the process of defining and adjusting the medical curriculum, a l...
Article
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Chemotherapy-induced neuropathy (CIN) is one of the most common complications of cancer treatment with sensory dysfunctions which frequently include pain. The mechanisms underlying pain during CIN are starting to be uncovered. Neuroimaging allows the identification of brain circuitry involved in pain processing and modulation and has recently been...
Article
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Background Imaging migraine premonitory studies show increased midbrain activation consistent with the ventral tegmental area, an area involved in pain modulation and hedonic feeding. We investigated ventral tegmental area pharmacological modulation effects on trigeminovascular processing and consequent glycemic levels, which could be involved in a...
Article
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Fibromyalgia is one of the most common causes of widespread chronic pain. It has a huge impact on the quality of life, namely because it appears earlier in life than most of the chronic pain conditions. Furthermore, emotional-cognitive distress factors, such as depression and anxiety, are a common feature in patients with fibromyalgia. The neurobio...
Article
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Pain transmission at the spinal cord is modulated by noradrenaline (NA)-mediated actions that arise from supraspinal areas. We studied the locus coeruleus (LC) to evaluate the expression of the cathecolamine-synthetizing enzyme tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and search for local oxidative stress and possible consequences in descending pain modulation in...
Article
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Migraine attacks can involve changes of appetite: while fasting or skipping meals are often reported triggers in susceptible individuals, hunger or food craving are reported in the premonitory phase. Over the last decade, there has been a growing interest and recognition of the importance of studying these overlapping fields of neuroscience fields,...
Article
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The treatment of neuropathic pain remains a clinical challenge. Analgesic drugs and antidepressants are frequently ineffective, and opioids may induce side effects, including hyperalgesia. Recent results on brainstem pain modulatory circuits may explain those clinical challenges. The dual action of noradrenergic (NA) modulation was demonstrated in...
Article
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Spinal cord injury (SCI) is a devastating event with a tremendous impact in the life of the affected individual and family. Traumatic injuries related to motor vehicle accidents, falls, sports, and violence are the most common causes. The majority of spinal lesions is incomplete and occurs at cervical levels of the cord, causing a disruption of sev...
Article
Background: Increased descending pain facilitation accounts for opioid-induced hyperalgesia, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Given the role of µ-opioid receptors in opioid-induced hyperalgesia in animals, the authors hypothesized that the dorsal reticular nucleus, a medullary pain facilitatory area, is involved in opioid-induced hyper...
Article
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Background: Increased descending pain facilitation accounts for opioid-induced hyperalgesia, but the underlying mechanisms remain elusive. Given the role of µ-opioid receptors in opioid-induced hyperalgesia in animals, the authors hypothesized that the dorsal reticular nucleus, a medullary pain facilitatory area, is involved in opioid-induced hype...
Article
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Chemotherapy-induced peripheral neuropathy (CIPN) is a problem during cancer treatment and for cancer survivors but the central mechanisms underlying CIPN remain understudied. This study aims to determine if CIPN is associated with alterations of noradrenergic modulation of nociceptive transmission at the spinal cord. CIPN was induced in male Wista...
Article
Chemotherapy‐induced neuropathy (CIN) is a common complication of cancer treatment. Although CIN is treated with antidepressants that act at serotonin (5‐HT) reuptake, the mechanisms of serotoninergic modulation of nociceptive transmission during CIN remain unknown, namely as to the involvement of the rostroventromedial medulla (RVM) and the role o...
Article
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Opioids play a major role at descending pain modulation but the effects of neuropathic pain on the brain opioidergic system remain understudied. Since descending facilitation is enhanced during neuropathic pain, we studied the opioidergic modulation of the dorsal reticular nucleus (DRt), a medullary pain facilitatory area, in the spared nerve injur...
Article
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The involvement of the reticular formation (RF) in the transmission and modulation of nociceptive information has been extensively studied. The brainstem RF contains several areas which are targeted by spinal cord afferents conveying nociceptive input. The arrival of nociceptive input to the RF may trigger alert reactions which generate a protectiv...
Article
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Migraine is a disabling brain disorder involving abnormal trigeminovascular activation and sensitization. Fasting or skipping meals is considered a migraine trigger and altered fasting glucose and insulin levels have been observed in migraineurs. Therefore peptides involved in appetite and glucose regulation including insulin, glucagon and leptin c...
Article
Diabetic neuropathy has a profound impact in the quality of life of patients who frequently complain of pain. The mechanisms underlying diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) are no longer ascribed only to damage of peripheral nerves. The effects of diabetes at the central nervous system are currently considered causes of DPN. Management of DNP may be ach...
Article
Kyotorphin (KTP) is an endogenous peptide with analgesic properties when administered into the central nervous system (CNS). Its amidated form (L-Tyr-L-Arg-NH2; KTP-NH2) has improved analgesic efficacy after systemic administration, suggesting blood-brain barrier (BBB) crossing. KTP-NH2 also has anti-inflammatory action impacting on microcirculatio...
Article
Diabetes Mellitus type 1 is a metabolic disease that predisposes to erectile dysfunction, partly owing to structural and molecular changes in the corpus cavernosum (CC) vessels. The aim of this study was to determine the effects of early treatment with the antioxidant epigallocatechin gallate (EGCG) in cavernous diabetes-induced vascular modificati...
Article
The involvement of transient receptor vanilloid type-1 (TRPV1) channels in pain modulation by the brain remains understudied. The rostroventromedial medulla (RVM) plays a key role in conveying to the spinal cord pain modulatory influences triggered in higher brain centres, with co-existence of inhibitory (antinociceptive) and facilitatory (pronocic...
Article
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Migraine is a painful neurologic disorder with premonitory symptomatology that can include disturbed appetite. Migraine pathophysiology involves abnormal activation of trigeminocervical complex (TCC) neurons. Neuropeptide Y (NPY) is highly synthesized in the brain and is involved in pain modulation. NPY receptors are present in trigeminal ganglia a...
Article
Amidated kyotorphin (L-Tyr-L-Arg-NH2; KTP-NH2) has analgesic properties following systemic administration. Although KTP-NH2 does not have toxic effects in the liver, its biodistribution is unknown. KTP-NH2 was radioiodinated to evaluate its biological fate in vivo. Mono-radioiodinated KTP-NH2 ([125I]MIK) was radiochemically stable in vitro, namely...
Article
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Chronic brain ischemia is a prominent risk factor for neurological dysfunction and progression for dementias, including Alzheimer’s disease (AD). In rats, permanent bilateral common carotid artery occlusion (2VO) causes a progressive neurodegeneration in the hippocampus, learning deficits and memory loss as it occurs in AD. Kyotorphin (KTP) is an e...
Article
The dorsal reticular nucleus (DRt) plays a key role in facilitation of nociceptive transmission at the spinal cord. In this study, we evaluated the mechanisms involved in GABA-mediated control of the DRt focusing on the role of local GABAB receptors. First, we used in vivo microdialysis to study the release of GABA in the DRt during the course of t...
Article
Spinal 5-HT3 receptor (5-HT3R) has been implicated in chronic pain development. The extent to which 5-HT3R contributes to spinal sensitization and diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) remains elusive and the mechanisms subserving the effects of 5-HT3R activation on spinal pain processing during chronic pain are still unclear. In this study, we evaluated...
Article
Noradrenaline reuptake inhibitors are known to produce analgesia through a spinal action but they also act in the brain. However, the action of noradrenaline on supraspinal pain control regions is understudied. The authors addressed the noradrenergic modulation of the dorsal reticular nucleus (DRt), a medullary pronociceptive area, in the spared ne...
Article
General anesthetics (GA) are well known for the ability to induce a state of reversible loss of consciousness and unresponsiveness to painful stimuli. However, evidence from animal models and clinical studies show that GA exposure may induce behavioral changes beyond acute effects. Most research and concerns are focused on changes in cognition and...
Article
The dorsal reticular nucleus (DRt) plays a key role in facilitation of nociceptive transmission at the spinal cord. In this study we evaluated the mechanisms involved in GABA-mediated control of the DRt focusing on the role of local GABAB receptors. First, we used in vivo microdialysis to study the release of GABA in the DRt during the course of th...
Chapter
The increasing prevalence of chronic pain imposes to search for new therapeutic approaches. Despite the increase in basic and clinical pain research during the last decades, the available analgesic drugs remained considerably unchanged. Gene therapy emerged as an important tool in the pain field. Studies in experimental pain models consisted on blo...
Article
Amidated kyotorphin (L-Tyr-L-Arg-NH2; KTP-NH2) causes analgesia when systemically administered. The lipophilic ibuprofen-conjugated derivative of KTP-NH2 has improved analgesic efficacy. However, fast degradation by peptidases impacts negatively in the pharmacodynamics of these drugs. In this work, selected derivatives of KTP and KTP-NH2 were synth...
Article
Full-text available
In Alzheimer's disease (AD), besides the characteristic deterioration of memory, studies also point to a higher pain tolerance in spite of sensibility preservation. A change in the normal tau protein phosphorylation is also characteristic of AD, which contributes to the pathogenesis of the disease and is useful in early diagnosis. Kyotorphin (KTP)...
Article
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Injuries of the spinal cord trigger local healing but hardly restore normal function. Spinal cord injury (SCI) has been deeply studied to develop strategies for functional recovery. The study by van Gorp and colleagues uses a rat model of acute SCI to characterize the effects of intraspinal grafting of human fetal spinal cord-derived neural stem ce...
Article
Antidepressants that inhibit the recapture of noradrenaline have variable effects in chronic pain which may be related to the complex role of noradrenaline in pain modulation. Whereas at the spinal cord noradrenaline blocks nociceptive transmission, both antinociception and pronociception were reported after noradrenaline release in the brain. To s...
Article
Full-text available
The adverse side-effects associated with opioid administration restrain their use as analgesic drugs and call for new solutions to treat pain. Two kyotorphin derivatives, kyotorphin-amide (KTP-NH2) and ibuprofen-KTP-NH2 (IbKTP-NH2) are promising alternatives to opioids: they trigger analgesia via an indirect opioid mechanism and are highly effectiv...
Chapter
Full-text available
This chapter provides an overview of the main current applications of gene therapy for chronic pain in what concerns animal studies and putative clinical applications. The value of gene therapy in unravelling neuronal brain circuits involved in pain modulation is also analyzed. After alerting to the huge socioeconomic impact of chronic pain in mode...
Article
Full-text available
Diabetes is a major health problem with an alarming increasing prevalence, and is the most frequent cause of neuropathy worldwide. Neuropathy affects 50–60% of diabetic patients, being a major life-quality impairment for a quarter of these patients. Diabetic neuropathic pain (DNP) is characterized by spontaneous pain, mechanical hyperalgesia and ta...
Article
Diabetes type 1 is a very common chronic disease that frequently initiates in youth. Patients suffering from this disease have an increased risk of developing complications such as cardiovascular disease or erectile dysfunction. This is partially due to oxidative stress in affected cells, induced by the increasing production of reactive oxygen spec...
Article
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Establishing credible cut scores for performance-type examinations in health professions education can be challenging. The authors aimed to compare the pass-fail cut-score reliability with the maximum reliability cut-score from multiple-choice tests (MCTs) designed on different undergraduate disciplines. Using the cross-sectional evaluation of 1370...
Article
Aims Noradrenaline is involved in pain transmission but its role in pain facilitation is poorly understood. We sought to study noradrenaline effects at a supraspinal pain facilitatory area, the dorsal reticular nucleus (DRt). We determined: i) the effect of inflammatory (formalin model) and neuropathic pain (spared nerve injury model; SNI) in the r...
Article
N-methyl-D-aspartate receptors (NMDAR) have a role in cardiovascular control at the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS), eliciting increases or decreases in blood pressure (BP), depending on the area injected with the agonists. In spite of the association between cardiovascular control and pain modulation, the effects of manipulating NMDAR in pain resp...
Article
The pharmaceutical potential of natural analgesic peptides is mainly hampered by their inability to cross the blood-brain barrier, BBB. Increasing peptide-cell membrane affinity through drug design is a promising strategy to overcome this limitation. To address this challenge, we grafted ibuprofen (IBP), a nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drug, to ky...
Article
Painful diabetic neuropathy (PDN) induces neuronal hyperactivity at the spinal cord and periaqueductal gray (PAG), a key area in descending nociceptive modulation. Since the PAG uses relay stations at serotoninergic and noradrenergic brainstem areas, we determined the serotonin and noradrenaline levels at the spinal cord of streptozotocin-diabetic...
Article
Fibrinogen A alpha-chain amyloidosis (AFib) is an autosomal dominant condition with variable penetrance, usually of late onset. Progression to stage V chronic kidney disease is a consistent feature. There is a cluster of AFib in the district of Braga, Portugal, characterized as a systemic disease with a high penetrance.
Article
Targeting supraspinal pain control centers by gene transfer is known to induce sustained analgesia. In this study, we evaluated the effects of injecting a Herpes Simplex Virus type 1 vector which expresses enkephalin (HSV-ENK vector) in the lateralmost part of the caudal ventrolateral medulla (VLMlat), a pain control center that exerts mainly desce...
Article
Full-text available
Kyotorphin (KTP; L-Tyr-L-Arg), an endogenous neuropeptide, is potently analgesic when delivered directly to the central nervous system. Its weak analgesic effects after systemic administration have been explained by inability to cross the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and detract from the possible clinical use of KTP as an analgesic. In this study, we...
Article
To evaluate the effects of antioxidant treatment of streptozotocin (STZ)-diabetic rats with α-lipoic acid (α-LA) in neuronal and microglial activation at the spinal cord, an important relay station of nociceptive transmission. Because of the role of the potassium chloride co-transporter 2 (KCC2) in neuronal activation at the spinal cord and the inf...
Article
Unlabelled: Hypertension-associated hypoalgesia is widely recognized in acute pain conditions. In chronic pain states, however, the relationship between blood pressure and pain sensitivity is still ill-defined, with different authors reporting negative, positive, or even no relationship at all. This work addresses this issue, using complete Freund...
Article
neuronal hyperactivity at the spinal cord during mechanical hyperalgesia induced by diabetes may result from a decrease in the local expression of the potassium chloride co-transporter 2 (KCC2), which shifts the action of the neurotransmitter γ-amminobutiric acid (GABA) from inhibitory to excitatory. In this study, we evaluated the effects of spina...
Article
Descending modulation of nociceptive transmission depends on the release of noradrenaline at the spinal cord. The role of noradrenaline in the control of nociceptive transmission at the supraspinal pain control system remains understudied. As chronic pain is associated with enhanced descending facilitation of nociceptive transmission, we sought to...
Article
Painful diabetic neuropathy may be due to impairments in descending modulation of nociceptive transmission at the spinal cord. In the present study, streptozotocin diabetic rats (STZ rats) with neuropathic symptoms (mechanical hypersensitivity) were used to perform a time-course evaluation of neuronal activity at the spinal dorsal horn and at the p...
Article
The existence of putatively painful situations to the fetus demands a careful evaluation of the issue of fetal pain. Several indirect approaches are used to evaluate the existence of fetal pain. Neurobiological studies showed that from the 30th week on, the anatomical and physiological system for pain transmission is already developed, with the con...
Article
The caudal ventrolateral medulla (CVLM) is a key component of the supraspinal pain modulatory system. Pain modulation from the CVLM is partially relayed by spinally projecting noradrenergic neurons of the pontine A(5) cell group, which leave collateral fibres at the CVLM. The injection of angiotensin II (Ang II) into the CVLM was recently shown to...

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